Absolute and incremental workpiece positions, Fundamentals 3.1 – HEIDENHAIN TNC 620 (81760x-01) User Manual

Page 89

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Fundamentals

3.1

3

TNC 620 | User's Manual

HEIDENHAIN Conversational Programming | 3/2014

89

Absolute and incremental workpiece positions

Absolute workpiece positions

Absolute coordinates are position coordinates that are referenced

to the datum of the coordinate system (origin). Each position on the

workpiece is uniquely defined by its absolute coordinates.
Example 1: Holes dimensioned in absolute coordinates

Hole

1

Hole

2

Hole

3

X = 10 mm

X = 30 mm

X = 50 mm

Y = 10 mm

Y = 20 mm

Y = 30 mm

Incremental workpiece positions

Incremental coordinates are referenced to the last programmed

nominal position of the tool, which serves as the relative

(imaginary) datum. When you write an NC program in incremental

coordinates, you thus program the tool to move by the distance

between the previous and the subsequent nominal positions. This

is why they are also referred to as chain dimensions.
To program a position in incremental coordinates, enter the

function "I" before the axis.
Example 2: Holes dimensioned in incremental coordinates

Absolute coordinates of hole

4

X = 10 mm
Y = 10 mm

Hole

5

, with respect to

4

Hole

6

, with respect to

5

X = 20 mm

X = 20 mm

Y = 10 mm

Y = 10 mm

Absolute and incremental polar coordinates

Absolute polar coordinates always refer to the pole and the angle

reference axis.
Incremental polar coordinates always refer to the last programmed

nominal position of the tool.

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